GNU Network Object Model Environment
This metaport installs the entire GNOME 2 desktop, including
the the most common user applications. Other popular GNOME
applications can be installed from the other GNOME 2 metaports:
* x11/gnome2-fifth-toe
* x11/gnome2-power-tools
* editors/gnome2-office
* devel/gnome2-hacker-tools
WWW: http://www.FreeBSD.org/gnome/

Update to GNOME 2.4.0. For all the goodies on what's changed, known issues,
future plans, etc., please see http://www.gnome.org/start/2.4/.
This commit represents work done by adamw, bland, and myself as well as
many other contributers:
Koop Mast <einekoai@chello.nl>
Akifyev Sergey <asa@gascom.ru>
Franz Klammer <klammer@webonaut.com>
?yvind Kolbu <oyvind@kebab.gaffel.nu>
Thomas E. Zander <riggs@rrr.de>
Jeremy Messenger <mezz7@cox.net>
Without these contirbuters, and our faithful users, GNOME 2.4.0 would not
be possible.
Please check the FreeBSD GNOME site for any FreeBSD gotchas, as well as
general FAQs and documentation (GNOME 2.4 updates to be posted soon). The
best way to upgrade so that you get all shared library dependencies is:
portupgrade -rf -m BATCH=yes atk
portupgrade -R -m BATCH=yes gnome2
Approved by: portmgr (kris, will, myself implicitly)
Requested by: re as well as many other users

Presenting GNOME 2.0.3. This rev of the meta port is more closely in line
with the official GNOME 2.0.3 distribution. glade, metacity, metatheme,
and nautilus-gtkhtml are no longer included. Most or those, however, can
stil be installed from the gnome2-fifth-toe.

Modify the gnomeapplets2 dependency so it depends on a file that is
actually installed on all architectures. This should fix the meta-port
build on Alpha.
Note to portmgr, the RELEASE_5_0_0 tag should be adjusted to account for
this change.
Reported by: bento

Allow gnomecontrolcenter to coexist with GNOME 2. This is need so
evolution users can still have Palm Pilot support. While not pretty,
this is supported by GNOME 2.0, and doesn't overwrite any GNOME 2.0
files.

Add a WWW entry that points to the FreeBSD GNOME project site. This way,
new GNOME users will know where the FreeBSD-specific docs and FAQs are. The
FreeBSD GNOME site can then redirect them to gnome.org for additional
information.